Powell v. State

29 S.E. 309, 101 Ga. 9, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 147
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 2, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by146 cases

This text of 29 S.E. 309 (Powell v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powell v. State, 29 S.E. 309, 101 Ga. 9, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 147 (Ga. 1897).

Opinion

Little, J.

A number of grounds are set out in the motion for a new trial, which was overruled. Inasmuch, however, as the case, goes back for another trial, we purposely omit consideration of such of them as we do not deem material to be decided for the purposes of another hearing.

1. The first six grounds of the amended motion are based on the rulings of the court where witnesses were introduced by the defendant to show the character of the deceased for violence. Without going into the details of the rulings set out in these several exceptions, it is sufficient here to say that, except when special facts may have been shown to have existed in a particular case, proof of character, conduct or utterances of the deceased is not admissible in evidence in trials for homicide, because neither of them will ordinarily justify or extenuate the killing. 2 Bishop’s Crim. Proc. § 609. In the class of cases, however, where the defendant rests his defense on the claim that he acted in self-defense, the particulars and details of his action become material, because the law judges him by the necessity for his action as it truly appeared to him, and he may then legally give in evidence such things known to him of the character, prior conduct or threats of the person with whom he was contending as may justly be considered as affecting his action which brought about the homicide, and as well of “ a generally known evil trait of a sort which might properly influence his conduct, as that the attacking person was in character quarrelsome and dangerous.” 2 Bishop’s Crim. Proc. §§610,613; Doyal v. The State, 70 Ga. 134. Such evidence must, however, be confined to the general reputation of the deceased, and this can not be established by proof of specific acts. Doyal v. The State, supra.

[17]*17It is not proper, in such examinations, when the question of the character of the deceased for peace or violence is in issue, to confine the testimony of the witness, in establishing general reputation, to proof of what is generally said in reference to the same. It is competent to show by a witness who lives in the same community with the person whose character is in issue, that he knows the estimation in which he is held by the people, and that he has never heard the character of such person questioned. If a witness called to prove the character of another were confined alone to the question as to what people said about a given person, such evidence would not in all cases tend to show the true standing of the person inquired about. If nothing has been said in the community in which a man lives against his honesty and integrity ; if it has never in any way been called in question, it would hardly be fair or reasonable to conclude that, because such questions had never been raised, the person inquired about had not any established character for such virtues. On the contrary, proof of the fact that no question had ever been raised against him in this regard, authorizes the inference that the character is good. What people in the neighborhood generally say is a fundamental source of inquiry by which character may be established; but if the witness is prepared to testify that he has never heard the character of the deceased for peaceableness questioned, that he has lived in the same community with him for any considerable length of time and has mingled with persons who knew him, it is competent evidence; and the result of such testimony is to show that the witness did in fact sufficiently know the general character of the person inquired about, to entitle him to testify in relation thereto. Flemister v. The State, 81 Ga. 768 ; Hodgkins v. The State, 89 Ga. 761.

2. The seventh and eighth grounds of the motion for new trial assign as error the refusal of the presiding judge to admit in evidence testimony that the defendant complained of his throat being sore, the witness having previously testified that he had seen marks like finger-prints on the side of the defendant’s neck, and the theory of the defendant’s case being that the deceased attempted to commit a felony on his person by [18]*18choking him at the time he shot the deceased. Complaints of pain made by the defendant, under such circumstances, are admissible. Atlanta St. R. R. Co. v. Walker 93 Ga. 467; Broyles v. Prisock, 97 Ga. 643; 1 Greenl. Ev. § 102. What probative value such evidence, when admitted, may have, must vary according to the circumstances of each case. It may amount to very little, or, indeed, have no weight as affecting the result of the trial, or there may exist circumstances under which it would have a greater value. But in any event, what value is to be attached to it must be left to the determination of the jury charged with the ascertainment of the truth of the accusation made, and it comes to them as any other fact as part of the history of the case.

3. The twelfth ground of the motion alleges error in the ruling of the court by which the case was reopened and new evidence introduced after the same had been closed and the defendant’s witnesses discharged. Under the repeated rulings of this court, being so general as to need no citation, the question of reopening a case at any particular stage of the proceedings to let in additional testimony is largely in the discretion of the court'and must necessarily be so; and we are not prepared to say that the court abused his discretion in the present instance.

4. The court charged the jury the law in relation to confessions. The foundation for this charge is to be found alone in a statement testified to by witness Homer Adams, which was to the effect that he saw the prisoner after the killing in the court-house at Rochelle and heard him speak in relation to the killing as follows : “ He said that his conscience did not bother him any more about killing Reid than if he had killed a damned dog. He said he was sorry for his wife and on Reid’s wife’s account.” In opening his charge to the jury, the court instructed them that the defendant admitted the shooting, but insisted that it was done under circumstances of justification. The whole evidence and statement of the prisoner show that the question of whether the defendant did the shooting was not the real issue. The words used by the defendant, according to the statement of the witness, were in no sense a confession of guilt. They constitute certainly a criminating admission [19]*19that he killed .Reid.. Further than this, the words tended to deny guilt in the commission of the act, in that his conscience justified the act. As a criminating admission against him his statement was admissible in evidence; but the court, in charging the jury, overlooked the distinction between confessions of guilt and admissions of mere evidentiary facts not inconsistent with innocence, and accordingly erred in treating the statement as a sufficient basis for giving in charge to the jury the law relating to confessions. Dumas v. The State, 63 Ga. 600 ; Fletcher v. The State, 90 Ga. 468 ; Nightengale v. The State, 94 Ga. 395.

5. In the twentieth ground of the motion for new trial it is urged that the court erred in its charge to the jury in relation to the impeachment of witnesses.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.E. 309, 101 Ga. 9, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-state-ga-1897.